Beginning to teach the end: the importance of including discharge from aphasia therapy in the curriculum

International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders
D Hersh, Madeline Cruice

Abstract

Discharging clients with long-term aphasia from therapy services constitutes a challenging dilemma for practising clinicians for a multitude of reasons. Although discharge was raised and discussed as a contentious issue in the field of aphasiology ten years ago, it remains an aspect of practice which is complex and underexplored. We are only a little more enlightened now than then on how to address this issue in relation to professional education and practice. This paper draws on a single case study of a man with aphasia, his wife, and treating clinician, taken from a substantial research study, to highlight awareness of how communication, choice and differing perceptions of goals of therapy influence the experience of the discharge process. The case serves as the context for addressing a gap in the university curriculum around teaching about discharge practice in the context of long-term aphasia. This paper describes how university and practice educators could include discharge issues in students' learning by teaching discharge in context, addressing it in formal university lessons as well as through work-based learning opportunities in clinical placements, and by scaffolding learning using graduated learning outcomes over the...Continue Reading

Citations

Jun 7, 2017·Chinese Medical Journal·Zeng-Zhi YuMei-Qi Zhou

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